- Conference Session
- Fresh Perspectives on Information Literacy
- Collection
- 2013 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
- Authors
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Amy S. Van Epps, Purdue University, West Lafayette
- Tagged Divisions
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Engineering Libraries
dividedbetween 14 sections of the class. Each section of the course has 120 students as the maximumenrollment, and most sections begin the semester at class capacity.The course has a faculty coordinator and a team of instructional support staff to help keep thesections aligned, coordinate common exams, and maintain the course blackboard site. There aretwo classrooms used to teach, a studio classroom, where there are laptop computers available forevery other student (60 computers supplied), and a laboratory setting where there are 120 laptopsavailable. Students may also bring their own laptops, which enable the class to be taught in the Page
- Conference Session
- Information Tools and Techniques for Engineering Education
- Collection
- 2013 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
- Authors
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Paul Richards, Brigham Young University
- Tagged Divisions
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Engineering Libraries
engineering textbooks without further research.With regards to electronic mediums in general, some studies using psychology e-textbookssuggest that e-textbooks do not impact student learning relative to printed textbooks (Shepperd etal., 2008, Taylor, 2011). Daniel and Woody (2013) recently investigated students’ use andperformance on a variety of print and electronic formats in both laboratory and at homeconditions. They randomly assigned students to use a chapter of an introductory psychologytextbook in one of five formats: print textbook, printed text pages, printed manuscript inMicrosoft Word, electronic pdf, or electronic textbook. The results from the study indicated thatthe various formats had no significant impact on student learning
- Conference Session
- Engineering Libraries (ELD) Poster Session
- Collection
- 2013 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
- Authors
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Alison Bradley, University of North Carolina, Charlotte; R. Daniel Latta, University of North Carolina, Charlotte; Meg Harkins, University of North Carolina, Charlotte
- Tagged Divisions
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Engineering Libraries
completely in library instruction sessions in the future. Sarah Clarkand Susan Chinburg3 created a model for comparing groups of students who received differingtypes of research instruction within a single large-scale course, allowing others to adopt theirmodel to compare a set of students receiving library instruction with a control group that did not.Finally, Virginia Young and Linda Ackerson8 developed a program to conduct bibliographicevaluation of large numbers of student papers by trained staff members, allowing a larger samplefor evaluation than a single librarian or instructor could manage individually. Collaboration between librarians and teaching faculty The professional literature in librarianship clearly illustrates both the need to